Here we are! We’ve arrived at the 10 biggest ever moments of the transfer window ever.

We’ve already seen some memorable ones in our countdown from 50-11 over the last week. We’ve had massive transfers, both good and bad, we’ve had clubs and players dropping clangers online and in real life and even a moment where Sky Sports’ Jim White thought he was MC Hammer.

Now it’s time for the Top 10 and there are some right classics in there as we count down to the biggest ever transfer window moment.

Life's a beach: Wenger enjoys some down time in Ipanema (Photo: Splash)

But he must have been doing something while he was handing out yellows and awarding free-kicks as Danny Welbeck joined the Gunners in the early hours of September 3rd.

9. Torres to Chelsea

This one can go down as one of the biggest and worst transfers of the window. The Liverpool ace controversially moved to Chelsea in January 2011 for a British record £50m, the most expensive transfer between two British clubs at the time.

Record breaker: Chelsea splashed the cash in January 2011 (Photo: Getty)

But after scoring 81 goals in 142 games for the Merseyside club (by some way his best return for any club in his career) he lost his golden touch in West London. It took him 15 games to open his account and he went on to score 45 goals in 172 games, which actually seems like way more games than he actually played for the Blues.

He’s now back at his hometown club Atletico Madrid but has never managed to recover his goalscoring exploits since his Liverpool days.

8. David Gold tweets photo of wrong player

I’m not saying David Gold had no idea who Pedro Obiang was but David Gold had no idea who Pedro Obiang was when the Spanish Sampdoria midfielder signed for West Ham in 2015.

Announcing the deal, Gold tweeted “I am delighted to announce the signing of 23 year old midfield Pedro Obiang from Sampdoria”. All well and good except he attached a photo of Angelo Ogbonna. Not Spanish (Italian), not a midfielder (defender) and not a Sampdoria player (Juventus).

6. Sterling joins Man City

Another forward moving to the Etihad for mega bucks but this time Dazzler didn’t have to don a giant animal outfit when Raheem Sterling left Liverpool for Manchester City in the summer of 2015.

City paid £45m for the 20-year-old with £5m in add-ons making him the most expensive Englishman of all time. And the reason it;' this high up the list is because most people’s reaction was: “£49M? Have you been inhaling nitrous oxide?!”

Money well spent? City splashed out for Sterling last summer (Photo: Manchester City FC/Press Association Images)

Because while Sterling had shown he had potential that put him in the same price bracket as Fernando Torres; a player who had already scored 172 goals by that point.

If ever there was an example of the over inflation of prices during the transfer window this was it. Although if Sterling goes on to win the Premier League and even Champions League for City and make 50+ appearances for England and then leave for even more then City will rightly claim it was money well spent.

5. Delph’s U-turn

He released a statement on Villa’s website that said: “I’m aware there has been intense media speculation surrounding my future in the last 24 hours and I want to set the record straight. I’m not leaving. I’m staying at the football club and I can’t wait for the start of the season and captaining this great football club.

“I’m a loyal person and committing my future to the club will how people what type of guy I am.”

Fabian maybe needs to look up what the word loyalty means because just 120 hours later he was unveiled as a City player and to say Villa fans were unhappy is an understatement.

4. Gareth Bale joins Real Madrid

The most expensive transfer of all time. Gareth Bale left Tottenham for Real Madrid for a world record £86m (€118) in the summer of 2013.

It eclipsed team-mate Cristiano Ronaldo’s move to the Galacticos by a good £6m, something that reportedly still irks the Portuguese striker to this day.

It followed a barnstorming 2012-13 season from the Welshman where he scored 26 goals and dragged Spurs to 5th in the table, as well as amassing 72 points; their biggest ever tally in the Premier League.

Bale out: The Welshman was snapped up un the summer of 2013

And while his time at Real Madrid has been dogged by inconsistency he’s still managed a record of nearly a goal every two games and has won the Champions League, Copa del Rey, FIFA Club World Cup and UEFA Super Cup already.

And all this after Harry Redknapp switched the young left-back to left wing early on in his Spurs days. Probably the best thing Harry has ever done outside of his car window.

3. Berahino's Twitter outburst

As we saw with Dean Cox at number 15, social media can be a good place for footballers to shut down silly rumours and strengthen the bond between them and the fans.

Except if your name is Saido Berahino. The West Brom starlet was frustrated at Baggies’ chairman Jeremy Peace’s blocking his £23m move to Tottenham and took to Twitter to let loose.

“Sad how I can’t say exactly how the club has treated me but I can officially say I will never play [for] Jeremy Peace” he tweeted the morning after Deadline Day.

It was retweeted 45,000 times before he swiftly deleted it but the damage was done. He’s not been a regular in the West Brom side since as manager Tony Pulis continues to seemingly punish Berahino for his outburst.

Whoops.

2. Odemwingie’s travels

We’ve all done things we regret - and there are plenty of regrettable things on this very list - but Peter Odemwingie must forever wish had never got in his car that fateful Deadline Day in 2013.

The then West Brom striker drove 120 miles from Birmingham to West London in a bid to speed up a move from QPR. Unfortunately for Peter the moved wasn’t quite as far down the line as he had been told.

On the road: Peter Odemwingie stops for a chat with Sky (Photo: Sky News)

So when he was stopped at QPR’s training ground by reporters he announced the deal himself and told them was “ready for a new chapter” that chapter. Unfortunately that new chapter was back at West Brom because the deal was never completed.

"I didn't even know what to think; I was laughing and almost crying at the same time! I believed it was done, I had nothing to hide,” he later told Sky Sports. This time not from his car window.

"When the cameras came, I didn't feel awkward to say 'yes, this is where we are'. Unless you see it on paper nothing is done, so that's why I said it's a 90 per cent done deal.

Turning his back on them: Odemwingie just couldn't wait (Photo: Scott Heavey)

"They (West Brom players) were confused a bit and they knew I believed the deal was done. But then it was tough of course with the fans.

"(After the move collapsed) I said I'm going to play a song from Akon, Lonely, and drive home. I wish it all didn't happen, but that's life."